This is a revised and updated version of the original Dalton Highway
Photo Journey, which was co-authored and hosted by Andy Field. It
was, and remains, an adjunct to the Dalton
Highway page of his
site on High Priority Corridors (a few dozen highways deemed by Congress
to be of special national importance and worthy of priority Federal support
-- the Dalton Highway is High Priority Corridor 24).

The largely unpaved 415-mile-long Dalton Highway runs
from Livengood (on Alaska state route 2 northwest of Fairbanks, about halfway
to Manley Hot Springs), through the Brooks Range, to Deadhorse and Prudhoe
Bay. Its gravel surfaces are notoriously rough on tires and windshields.
Built in haste in 1974 as the "haul road" for construction of the parallel
Trans-Alaska Pipeline, it remains a vital supply line to the oilfields
of Alaska's Arctic Coast. Long restricted to oilfield and pipeline
service vehicles, it is now open to the general public all the way to its
north end a few miles south of the Arctic Ocean. However, there is
almost no population along the way, and travel services are very limited. North of Coldfoot is the longest service-free stretch of highway in North America -- no gas, no restaurants, no motels, no nothing (except awesome
scenery) for over 240 miles. (See Andy
Field's Dalton Highway page, and other sites listed at the bottom of
page 3 of this Photo Journey,
for more information.)

Unless otherwise indicated, the photos below are my own, and from
a van tour of the highway I took in suumer 1994. A few photos were taken
on my return trip to Alaska in summer 2001 which included just the first
few miles of the highway's southern end. I've also added some photos from
Bob Hoffmann's Alaska
Adventures collection, and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, to fill
gaps in the collection. I later added many additional photos by Walter Haight,
from his August 2004 trip on the highway to the Arctic Ocean and back; his photos include some
recently-paved sections, and also cover the northern half of the highway better than I did.
If you have photos I can use, with appropriate
credit, to fill other gaps (especially the north end of the highway), please
e-mail me.

NOTES: If you want to see a more detailed version
of one of the photos below, click it to view an enlarged, higher-quality
(less .jpg compression) version, if one is available. Those alternate versions
have much larger file sizes, so please be patient while they download.

This photo collection is divided into three pages. (It used to be only two pages;
some material previously on page 2 is now on page 3.) The photos below cover the southern end of the highway, from its beginning in Livengood to the Arctic Circle (mile 115). Page
2 covers the middle segment from the Arctic Circle to Atigun
Pass through the Brooks Range (mile 245). Page 3 completes
the journey north to the Arctic Ocean, and concludes with a list of reference sources and some other
Dalton Highway-related web sites.

This
is what the Dalton Highway's route shields look like -- at least the
ones that haven't been used for target practice (all too common in rural
Alaska). I think the elegant design, incorporating the Big Dipper and
the North Star from the state flag, makes Alaska's route shields among
the nicest in the U.S. (July 1994)

The Dalton Highway was long the highest-numbered route in Alaska,
until 2001 when the Klondike Highway from Skagway in southeast Alaska to
the Canadian border was designated as route 98 (for the gold rush of 1898).

This is the
south end of the Dalton Highway, facing southbound, where it joins the
Elliott Highway (Alaska state route 2) near Livengood. Most southbound
Dalton Highway traffic goes straight ahead onto the eastbound Elliott Highway
to Fairbanks. A right turn takes you west on the Elliott Highway,
to Manley Hot Springs. (June 2001)

These three signs greet northbound
travelers at the south end of the Dalton Highway, to remind them of the
long, hard haul ahead. (All photos June 2001)

The distance
sign on the left at the beginning of the Dalton Highway is from my July 1994
vacation. (The highway is named for an engineer involved in early oil exploration
efforts on the North Slope.) By my return in June 2001, it was replaced by the
sign on the right (with the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, paralleling the highway,
in the background).

This photo
of the pipeline alongside the highway was taken somewhere north of the
Yukon River, probably near mile 90. The pipeline zigzags so it can shrink
and expand as temperature changes, and also flex during an earthquake,
without breaking. See page 2
for some closer views of the pipeline. (July 1994)

A trucker drove his rig off the road here, somewhere south of the Yukon
River. (July 1994)

This highway
bridge (photographed from a boat approaching from the east) crosses the
Yukon River near mile 56. The bridge has a wooden deck and a 6% grade,
and is about 2290 feet long. The bridge also carries the pipeline across
the river -- an arrangement that makes pipeline security officials
very nervous. After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, a security
checkpoint was set up south of the bridge for inspections of northbound
vehicles, to beef up security for the bridge and other parts of the pipeline. (July 1994)

This photo shows both the
Yukon River bridge's wooden deck, and the grille along the right side covering the pipeline. (August 2004, courtesy of Walter Haight)

The turnoff to this Arctic
Circle sign is at mile 115.5. The Dalton Highway is the only highway in the
United States, and one of only two in North America, to cross the Arctic
Circle. (July 1994)